Why We Can't Do Plays Like Shakespeare Anymore: The London History Show

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  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • Please support the channel on Patreon here: www.patreon.com/jdraperlondon
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    Sources and further reading:
    Bowsher, J. & Miller, P. 2009. The Rose and the Globe- playhouses of Shakespeare’s Bankside, Southwark.
    Cerasano, S. P. 1989. Raising a Playhouse from the Dust. www.jstor.org/stable/2870613
    Kohler, R. C. 1989. Excavating Henslowe's Rose. www.jstor.org/stable/2870612
    Mortimer, I. 2013. The Time Traveller’s Guide To Elizabethan England.
    Tucker, P. 1990. Teaching and Acting Shakespeare from Cue Scripts. www.jstor.org/stable/44657118
    Tucker, P. 2001. Secrets Of Acting Shakespeare: The Original Approach.
    00:00 Intro
    01:46 Things Are Different For The Audience
    09:46 Things Are Different For The Actors

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @possiblyadog
    @possiblyadog Год назад +2918

    Anyone who'd pay 5 pounds to stand during an entire Shakespeare play is a true legend. I couldn't do it

    • @MattDW45
      @MattDW45 Год назад +163

      The plays were shorter back then, plus there were food vendors

    • @rachelrmcbryan525
      @rachelrmcbryan525 Год назад +113

      I paid $20 in 2006 to see Romeo and Juliet! To stand! Lol

    • @anz10
      @anz10 Год назад +170

      I paid £5 and did the standing, I must be a true legend then ;) or just a Londoner who enjoys Shakespeare a lot :D .. It's easier than it sounds, the play and the atmosphere is so enjoyable that you can miraculously stand for 3 1/2 hours.. standing is probably the better 'seat' too as you are in the middle of the action, plays at the globe are a lot more interactive than other productions and probably come closer to how shakespeare plays would have been performed than in any other modern performance. I'm sure I must have tried to sit down somewhere during the 15mins interval though ;)

    • @ethelburga
      @ethelburga Год назад +50

      @@MattDW45 people come down to the pit from the seats because they're not having as much fun. We all used to stand for three or four hours without the toilet at football matches.

    • @Skag_Sisyphus
      @Skag_Sisyphus Год назад +41

      ​​@@anz10 while it's not a legendary skill and most people could likely do it, not everyone can. You're completely right about most people, though.
      . I used to be on my feet for 8 hours a day working retail, so i could definitely do it back then. But now ive been in 6 car accidents. 5 out of which i wasn't at fault for including a bus smashing into my car. I can't stand for more than 20 or so minutes or my nerve damage acts up there intense shooting pain, shaking and increased likelihood of my legs just giving out. It's really disappointing. I miss mosh pits and 7:29 concerts and a thing i wanted to do if i visited london was to watch the play in the pit

  • @josephkarl2061
    @josephkarl2061 Год назад +1387

    Also: AFAIK, one of the advantages Shakespeare had was he had his own company of players, and he wrote for those men. When you read Shakespeare, you're not necessarily reading King John, Hamlet, Richard iii, etc - you're reading the personalities of Richard Burbage, William Kempe and Thomas Pope. Shakespeare wrote parts based on his actors, which I'm certain made learning parts that much easier.

    • @MarkBonneaux
      @MarkBonneaux Год назад +24

      Oh nice! Any sources? I'd love to read/watch more about this

    • @kimeecleaton
      @kimeecleaton Год назад +34

      ​@@MarkBonneaux I'm sure it's not a source at ALL, but the film Shakespeare in Love shows a bit of this and it's good fun 🙂

    • @Jeffhowardmeade
      @Jeffhowardmeade Год назад +144

      ​@@MarkBonneauxThe ultimate source for all things Elizabethan theater related in Andrew Gurr. I recommend The Shakespearean Stage (1992) and The Shakespeare Company (2004).
      Shakespeare would occasionally write the name of the actor into his script instead of the name of the character he was portraying. When this script was passed on to the printer for publication, the typesetter would just follow his copy and these errors would be preserved.
      Also, we know when certain actors entered and left the company, and the changes in the writing style that resulted. William Kempe was a known for his physical humor. Shakespeare's clowns and fools up until Kempe left the company in 1599 were buffoons. Kempe was replaced with Robert Armin, who was more of a witty comic. Shakespeare's clowns after that time were more dispensers of clever wisdom.
      Lastly, the female characters were played by boy actors. At least one could speak Welsh, as an instruction in Henry IV Part One says "The lady speaks in Welsh". In the early days of Shakespeare's company, these boys played girls or young women, mostly in brief roles. As these actors got older and became more capable, so did the complexity and age of Shakespeare's heroines.
      This wasn't something that was exclusive to Shakespeare and his company. Most of the poets of the era wrote plays specifically for one company or another, often under contract.

    • @tbotalpha8133
      @tbotalpha8133 Год назад +68

      Reminds me of how sports teams will often build their strategies around the strengths of individual players. To misuse an aphorism: "You go to war with the army that you have."

    • @Amcsae
      @Amcsae Год назад +19

      ​@@tbotalpha8133 Great point! The Argentine national team has been built to support Messi for many years, and the Spanish team's style changed and they focused on midfield players like Iniesta and Fabregas after David Villa and Fernando Torres stopped factoring in the national side. Just like Shakespeare! 😅 I love it!

  • @Tinyflydeposit
    @Tinyflydeposit Год назад +725

    Many years ago I decided to form a theatre group of young actors. I wanted to show how vibrant Shakespeare is. We performed in parks, school gymnasiums etc and charged little. We encouraged our audiences to engage, we addressed them directly as if the play was a conversation. We were successful for years. The plays don't need lights or the 4th wall. Curtains lights and elaborate sets destroy the need for Shakespeare's picture painting language and their immediacy in provoking thought. Teachers in high schools would tell us the kids would hate the language and get bored. They didn't they were rollicking loud audiences who often told us that this was the first time they had understood. Unfortunately I became ill and had to stop. A big professional theatre company jumped in and began touring schools but it fizzled. Theatre is full of ego maniacs who can't stand bare theatre, it doesn't clean their pants to see audiences mad about the play, not it's actors etc. Edit: I wrote 'cream' their pants. Auto correct changed it.

    • @PianoKwanMan
      @PianoKwanMan 9 месяцев назад +27

      creaming their pants sounds exactly the kind of thing that would happen in a shakespare play

    • @helenamcginty4920
      @helenamcginty4920 9 месяцев назад +35

      Ive seen an OU video about Shakespeare played not in RP with its stilted way of speaking but using what the linguist David Crystal calls OP. This has been developed by looking at the rhymes, puns etc that just dont work with modern pronunciations. When they performed for London school kids they found that they understood the plays better because of the pronunciation.

    • @aaronharkins4331
      @aaronharkins4331 9 месяцев назад

      @@helenamcginty4920OP is OP. It’s incredibly dirty I’m amazed they performed that in schools. It does sound great though. I’m always on the lookout for someone performing OP.

    • @jaidenirving4738
      @jaidenirving4738 9 месяцев назад +18

      I remember getting the Shakespeare unit in 10th grade English when everyone got assigned parts and, when allowed, everyone got really REALLY into it. We were having arguments mid play, divorces, extra affairs. We loved Shakespeare.

    • @Tinyflydeposit
      @Tinyflydeposit 9 месяцев назад +10

      @jaidenirving4738 Shakespeare is bloody wonderful. Performing for year 10 kids was the most fun experience of my life. Lots of participation, it was partipation art.

  • @amyspeers8012
    @amyspeers8012 Год назад +1731

    My husband has a PhD in linguistics and loves languages. He actually helped to translate, or as others have said “restore” Hamlet to the original Klingon. BTW-he also spoke to our son in Klingon for the first coulpe of years. No, my son is not messed up. He’s actually an opera singer and manager of a local theater!

    • @donttakemeseriously3564
      @donttakemeseriously3564 Год назад +176

      You’re the Klingon family! As an aspiring linguist, I’m star struck.

    • @Elfsinger
      @Elfsinger Год назад +95

      I love they way your son is not messed up and yet he went into theatre!! :D ;)

    • @deirenne
      @deirenne Год назад +48

      Well of course he isn't, he could learn other languages, mostly the one native to your home place, from aaaaaallll the other people he would interact with, that's just like second generation of immigrants in any country, especially if their parents don't speak local language. I was a similar case, I live in Poland, but my mother only spoke English to me until I was 10 or so, because she was super into linguistics and an English major [and now is an English teacher], so she wanted me to be a native English speaker - and I am, although as I kid in kindergarten, I got super offended when I learned that no, not every child speaks English at home, it's just me XD
      I'm curious though what were the rules for your family, if I may ask. Did you use only Klingon all the time with him? Only at home? Or some other way? And does he still understand Klingon now?

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Год назад +14

      Right? I’m not sure being in the opera world counts as “not messed up”. 😂​@@Elfsinger

    • @hyhena-gaming9986
      @hyhena-gaming9986 Год назад +30

      Klingon opera

  • @secretforreddit
    @secretforreddit Год назад +970

    Something about you in your fabulous period attire in a cozy, timeless room drinking a can of Monster Energy is just absolutely, wonderfully anachronistic.

    • @lsedge7280
      @lsedge7280 Год назад +40

      I was thinking the exact same, it's such a funny contrast

    • @davidphilpott1509
      @davidphilpott1509 Год назад +16

      Fabulous isn't it? :)

    • @eddelapena22
      @eddelapena22 Год назад +38

      Not just any can of Monster, it's Lewis Hamilton-flavoured

    • @Yandarval
      @Yandarval Год назад +14

      Period hair and hat, with Steampunk tinted glasses would work even better.

    • @blindleader42
      @blindleader42 Год назад +8

      I wonder how many anachrons a can of Monster Energy would have cost in 1599...
      Or a Nutrimatic cup of boiled leaf water.

  • @mattnyman9933
    @mattnyman9933 Год назад +413

    There was a company in Portland Oregon who tried to do this in a park. They performed Romeo and Juliet with lots of pauses for bus traffic. After a while it turned into a comedy. At one point, the stage manager called for the performers to do the scene as zombies. Was fun chaos.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 11 месяцев назад +73

      In my city, we have a now defunct outdoor theatre that was on the flight path of the local airport and they did musicals. Behind the proscenium arch they had a green-yellow-red traffic-light arrangement that told the actors when to stop because a plane was about to fly over.
      One day they were giving _Kismet_ and the pilot had the bad manners to fly through the most famous song in the musical, "Stranger in Paradise". So the singer was obliged to stop and pose like a statue _just_ after singing the lyric "I hang suspended...." Which brought the house down. The plane was across and out of earshot within 15 seconds, but they had to wait a couple of minutes for the audience to stop laughing.

    • @nicholaswhitman4620
      @nicholaswhitman4620 10 месяцев назад +14

      This feels incredibly in the spirit of the bard

    • @jonathanowens2337
      @jonathanowens2337 9 месяцев назад +21

      They still do it! It's called the original practice Shakespeare festival and we saw three performances this summer. It's a hoot. They perform in the evening, and there is intermission and bathrooms (it's held at local parks). But there is a book holder (called a referee, complete with whistle and striped shirt), no memorization, cue sheets only, and the barest of sets. Definitely worth a visit!

    • @carameldare
      @carameldare 9 месяцев назад +6

      To be fair, I'm pretty sure Romeo and Juliet was intended to be comedic. It's a very comedy of errors style tragedy.

    • @mattnyman9933
      @mattnyman9933 9 месяцев назад

      @@carameldare:I am unclear on why you included the phrase "To be fair..."

  • @elizabethgodwin7679
    @elizabethgodwin7679 11 месяцев назад +227

    It's not exactly the same, but I once did a show called "Secret Shakespeare" in which none of the actors met each other until the performance. It was wonderful! We got about a month to rehearse in our own homes and one rehearsal with the director. We were asked to come in disguise with the audience and stand up at our first line of the show. We did have a book holder, but they were in the front seat of the audience, not a corner of the stage. It felt spontaneous and exciting and the troupe instantly became friends.
    We did it as a fundraiser for the theater program in a local school. 10/10 would recommend! If you are part of a theater troupe or otherwise know someone who runs a troupe please suggest to them that they run a Secret Shakespeare. It's a great time, a great fundraiser and a great challenge.

    • @lordeden2732
      @lordeden2732 4 месяца назад

      Sorry, I don't believe you as It just would not work.

    • @elizabethgodwin7679
      @elizabethgodwin7679 4 месяца назад +2

      @@lordeden2732 Ya, that's the funny part. We messed up a lot! Also, I'm not sure if I mentioned that it was one night only.

    • @elizabethgodwin7679
      @elizabethgodwin7679 4 месяца назад +7

      It had the vibe of improv comedy where whenever we messed up we had to try to keep a straight face and roll with it while the audience laughed. I don't recommend doing this with Shakespeare's tragedies, only his comedies

  • @marijeangalloway1560
    @marijeangalloway1560 Год назад +826

    The fact that Shakespeare still packs 'em in the aisles after 400+ years of changing theatrical traditions is a testament to just how great he actually is. No doubt people will still be going to his plays when the actors are holograms or androids. "Not for an age but for all time"---indeed prophetic.

    • @SEAZNDragon
      @SEAZNDragon Год назад +44

      Not to mention his impact on the English language. There's a RUclipsr, Atun-Shei, who compared Shakespeare to Michael Bay. He was the guy who made the blockbusters for the masses. There were probably people back then who would quote the plays with their buddies at the pub. Also the way English was pronounced was different and really enhanced the word play.

    • @typograf62
      @typograf62 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@SEAZNDragon "Now is it Rome indeed, and room enough" - Rome and room sounds alike.
      As a non-native speaker it is interesting to notice quite how often Shakespeare is quoted today, both in the UK and the USA. BBC had a radio series called "Murder most foul", "What's in a name?" has been used as a title for a chapter about programming, "there is the rub" and so on. One of Shakespeares sonets is quoted in "Colossus" (the novel). Nothing similar happens in Danish. We have but one quote from Shakespeare (guess what) and - perhaps - one from an old Danish poem ("De higer og søger, i gamle bøger"). Sometimes I think you do not notice.

    • @chuckschillingvideos
      @chuckschillingvideos 9 месяцев назад +2

      I disagree. I'd bet most of the audience goes to see Shakespeare productions just to be seen (and subsequently crow about) going to see a Shakespearean production.

    • @binxbolling
      @binxbolling 9 месяцев назад +8

      Yeah, but he's been deified. I doubt some of his rivals were so much worse that their plays don't deserve to be produced nowadays. Where is the Royal Ben Jonson Theatre? Going to a Shakespeare performance is almost like going to Easter church service, something you do because it's supposed to be good for you.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go 8 месяцев назад +1

      They are good but also overrated. Like most people might not understand them - if you perform them in the original English. People go becausr they have heard he is deep and profound, because of the reputation instilled in us. So they go there but for the wrong reasons

  • @kj7067
    @kj7067 Год назад +419

    "Well, it's not very dramatic now, Terry" literally made me snort in my office. I'm going to have trouble explaining this to my colleagues.

    • @auldthymer
      @auldthymer Год назад +8

      Search for Jack Benny in the 1942 "To Be or Not to Be."

    • @DonnaChamberson
      @DonnaChamberson 11 месяцев назад +1

      Did you snort white powdery substance ❄️?

    • @sergiodbd
      @sergiodbd 11 месяцев назад +5

      “… … line” 😂😂

    • @benjamintillema3572
      @benjamintillema3572 9 месяцев назад

      15:32

    • @bernardkung7306
      @bernardkung7306 9 месяцев назад +1

      Well, you know... it really _was_ a more civilized time, wasn't it.

  • @philippenachtergal6077
    @philippenachtergal6077 Год назад +484

    Gathered from a quick internet search:
    For example, in 1629 French actresses appeared at Blackfriars in London; there seems to be no record of them being prosecuted, but the audience simply booed, hissed, and pelted them off the stage. Elizabethan theatre patrons’ refusal to countenance women on stage was considered a point of national pride by writers like Thomas Nashe. If a woman were ever prosecuted for acting a role in a play in England, it would probably be before a Consistory court or some similar church court, on a charge of “immodesty” or “lewdness,” rather than for violating some specific Parliamentary prohibition on actresses. The Puritans closed down the theatres completely during the Civil War and Interregnum, so actors and actresses were both illegal. Only at the Restoration did Charles II make it clear that actresses on stage would be met with royal favor from now on (he probably got used to them in France, where women were never kept off the stage).
    source: Daniel Baker, M.A. in European History, George Mason University

    • @guybrush1701
      @guybrush1701 Год назад

      That's really interesting. I never knew that not all of the puritans decided to ruin (bless, of course. Of COURSE I mean bless. 🙄) America with their presence.

    • @admthrawnuru
      @admthrawnuru Год назад +42

      Ya, actors being respectable is actually a fairly recent thing. In ancient Rome they were considered infamia similar to prostitutes or gladiators (that doesn't mean they weren't often popular, too, but not respectable). The idea is that by entertaining people with acting for money, you're selling your body in just a different way. I guess England kept that line of thinking longer than most countries.
      Of coursw this predisposition leads to there's the slippery slope thinking that if women are allowed on stage at all, then lewd performances are just around the corner.

    • @theobolt250
      @theobolt250 Год назад +4

      This was fun! And educative.

    • @pabloapostar7275
      @pabloapostar7275 Год назад +17

      @@admthrawnuru IIRC, in Procopius' Secret History, he explains the Empress's background was as an actress and then describes what she performed. In modern terminology, she was a porn star.

    • @wierdalien1
      @wierdalien1 Год назад +14

      ​@@pabloapostar7275 yes, but he was a dick, so it hard to tell how much he was telling the truth

  • @uuneya
    @uuneya Год назад +131

    Over here in the US I once got to see a local production where the actors only had their cue scripts. Since it was a comedy - Two Gentlemen of Verona - the book holder was dressed as a (US) football referee, and blew his whistle/threw down a yellow flag whenever someone flubbed a line. And since it was one of those "on the green" productions there was more of a faire crowd, with a good bit of chatter going on during the performance. It was a lot of fun!

    • @alonespirit9923
      @alonespirit9923 9 месяцев назад +2

      Aw man, sounds like quite the thing to behold. 🤣

  • @RavSoda
    @RavSoda Год назад +161

    Professional opera singer here…
    First of all great video as usual. Love your energy and all. Just wanted to add that many of the practices you mentioned do still continue in one way or another. I work at a repertory theatre in Germany and we do a different show every night pulling something out of the back of our minds after months sometimes. Therefore we do have someone to cue us if someone forgets their lines. And while actors and singers tend to use full scripts or vocal scores containing all the parts, the orchestras play from from cue sheets and so does the chorus sometimes. It’s amazing how much has changed and just as amazing how much hasn’t.
    Keep up the good work!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +6

      Yeah, instrumental parts do tend to be just your own part, the length of each bit you aren’t playing, and _maybe_ some cues if the person who wrote/typeset the individual parts though they’d be helpful. Mostly if you aren’t playing right then, you just count and/or learn the cues to listen for during rehearsals.

  • @renaia
    @renaia Год назад +229

    I went in to this thinking “Hah, I’m sure we could still put on plays like Shakespearean ones; it can’t be *that* different”. WELL. I was wrong! Thank you so much for this video, it was fascinating and insightful. Brilliant video.

    • @MarkBonneaux
      @MarkBonneaux Год назад +17

      I think with a few modernizations it'd be possible- new play each week instead of every day, able to have some minimal stage decoration/furniture, lighting for scene changes, intermission. I'd go, especially if it was cheaper than the movies

    • @willowtabby4926
      @willowtabby4926 Год назад +11

      ​@Pai Sho Cajun - Mark Bonneaux we do still have theatres and plays "in the round". One of the local high schools had a class that did an "in the round" adaptation of one of the Twilight movies back when they were still popular. No, it wasn't exactly as portrayed here (it was inside, in a large classroom or the school's multi-purpose room or gym or something), but it was definitely performed with the stage in the middle of a donut-type shape. From memory, there were some other differences, such as using a tv/projector system to aid with setting the scene, but yeah... was an interesting experience

    • @jmackmcneill
      @jmackmcneill Год назад +6

      It sounds very like modern "reportoirey" theatre (hope I got that right) where actors will do a different play every week. It's supposed to be an exhilarating but also miserable and exhausting experience.

    • @MarkBonneaux
      @MarkBonneaux Год назад

      @@jmackmcneill i can believe that. Even my idea above feels very much like a "do it for the love of theater" kind of job to have where even a week to week show change is going to be a heavy grind after probably a not too long period of time

  • @Harrydewulf
    @Harrydewulf Год назад +179

    I love it when someone points out how much of the stage direction is in the text. Often it's a lot subtler than the examples you gave, too.

    • @londongirl2768
      @londongirl2768 Год назад +12

      I do a lot of student theatre on props and set and it’s so useful when he just describes what props there are

    • @jmackmcneill
      @jmackmcneill Год назад +29

      There is no more realistic line in any work of fiction than: "Pass me the screwdriver... No, not that one, the phillips!"

    • @tbotalpha8133
      @tbotalpha8133 Год назад +28

      I imagine it's also helpful for the audience, who are more listening than seeing the show, to have the characters' body-language and actions described in speech.

    • @Albinojackrussel
      @Albinojackrussel Год назад +33

      Sometimes it's so fucking subtle that it's hard to find productions that do it. In the lore dump in the Tempest it's blatently fucking obvious that Miranda is supposed to be fucking about and not paying attention, because Prospero keeps pausing and asking her if she's paying attention (and she innocently says he is).
      Yet all I can find are productions where they have her sitting in rapt attention. Why would he be asking if she's paying attention if she hasn't taken her eyes off him the entire scene?!

    • @davidbouvier8895
      @davidbouvier8895 8 месяцев назад

      "Enter mariners, wet."

  • @monkiespukerabbits
    @monkiespukerabbits 11 месяцев назад +47

    As a blind person, I figured out a long time ago that one does not need to see the play. I would love to visit the Globe!
    I'm not an expert on the Bard's work, but the rythm of language makes up for all of that.
    I've never known what the Globe looked like; thank you so much for your description!

  • @CrazyArtistLady
    @CrazyArtistLady Год назад +57

    Back in the 2000's a theatre in Toronto did one of the comedies this way with only the que scripts. It was hysterically funny, and much more polished the second night. My favorite line was "Methinks I shouldnst be alone" and someone came flying onto the stage😂😂

    • @mirjanbouma
      @mirjanbouma 10 месяцев назад +7

      That sounds amazing! 😂

  • @michaelmcchesney6645
    @michaelmcchesney6645 Год назад +370

    My ex-girlfriend and I visited the Globe Theater in 1999 during a London vacation. She was a theater major that (at the time) worked for a theatrical supply company, so our vacation involved a lot of theater. Our tour guide explained that the new Globe was built exactly as the original Globe was built, with 2 exceptions. First, the theater had sprinklers because of the London fire code. Second were lights "because no theater could survive without putting on plays at night. We didn't see a play at the Globe, but we did see performances by two RSC-initialized Shakespeare companies. They were the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Reduced Shakespeare Company. The Reduced Shakespeare Company put on the Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Abridged. It really was very, very funny. Some years later, the play was brought to NYC, and I purchased tickets to see it with my (new) girlfriend, sister, and mother. To say they were not enthusiastic when they heard the title would be an understatement. But they did really enjoy it.

    • @coal.sparks
      @coal.sparks Год назад +29

      That script is a riot, but I wish that I could have bought a ticket to see backstage! The artistry of the folks who help those actors is a thing to behold.

    • @thexalon
      @thexalon Год назад +17

      That is an absolutely brilliant play. Especially for the "lucky" person who plays Ophelia.

    • @joshuamaldonado1721
      @joshuamaldonado1721 Год назад +8

      One high school in my district just put on a performance of that, it's incredibly funny.
      I don't know what you mean though as it is 100% accurate with no misrepresentations at all.

    • @pepperypeppers2755
      @pepperypeppers2755 Год назад +3

      When you say abridged here, do you mean with jokes inserted over top like anime fan dubs, or abridged as in shortened?

    • @michaelmcchesney6645
      @michaelmcchesney6645 Год назад +31

      @@pepperypeppers2755 Well, considering they perform the Complete works of Shakespeare in less than 2 hours, they either had to shorten them or talk very very very fast. As I recall, they perform every play besides Hamlet in the first act. They put on all the historical plays as a football game with (for example) Henry IV passing the ball to Richard III and so forth. There was an announcer to keep it all straight. Hamlet is put on for the entire second act. It's been 20 years since I saw it, and would love to see it again.

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronow Год назад +129

    They do sell beer at baseball games. Baseball is very much a social occasion as well, with the stadiums being equal part sporting venue and museum, and things like the unique design of each field and stadium, view of the city from your seat, and the friends you run into are seen as essential parts of the experience. FYI, the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals will be playing a two-game series a month from today at London Stadium. Would recommend.

    • @acchaladka
      @acchaladka Год назад +7

      Really? Do we have an Link to this game of rounders played by strongmen in the Americas? I might be tempted, especially if sugary salty cheesy things are for sale. And they charge but three pennies for the audiencing.

    • @SamAronow
      @SamAronow Год назад +4

      @@acchaladka The London Series is a thing they've done a few times now, as well as in some other countries. To my American eyes (who grew up as a fan of the team in the biggest stadium with among the cheapest tickets), the price is too high. But if I was in London I'd probably go anyway.

    • @acchaladka
      @acchaladka Год назад +1

      @@SamAronow I grew up with the bleacher bums at Shea Stadium in the 80s. I feel your comment.

    • @noorhanisahabrahman4929
      @noorhanisahabrahman4929 Год назад +3

      Btw looking forward to your next video on!! PS its always a little strange when you see a youtuber you watch on another channel that you Also watch.

    • @johngamble5270
      @johngamble5270 Год назад +2

      @@acchaladka Heh, what's served is probably limited by local laws and tradition. Still, if they managed to import some U.S. delicacies (sure, let's call them "delicacies") go for it.

  • @timothytikker3834
    @timothytikker3834 Год назад +167

    The bookholder is a role that survives in opera today, called a "prompter." Years ago I heard a recording of the world première of Olivier Messiaen's opera "Saint Fraçois d'Assise," and it was recorded such that the prompter could be heard giving out lines fairly constantly -- it was, after all, a new work, and very long and musically difficult at that.

    • @gwendolynrobinson3900
      @gwendolynrobinson3900 10 месяцев назад +15

      I learned in middle school (and someone is free to add on or correct me) that when people were cast as trees or background inanimate objects, it wasn't because they REALLY couldn't set up a standee, it was so they could assist the actors with lines. You know the whole show and you're just dressed as a tree and silent until someone forgets their lines 🫠

    • @larenkevin4531
      @larenkevin4531 9 месяцев назад +7

      On a less high-brow note, a local theater was putting on the musical Scrooge, and my family got involved. The actor playing the Ghost of Christmas Present had to drop out very last minute, and didn't have an understudy. We found someone to take his place, taught him the song and a few key lines. But for the rest, he and Ebenezer acted out of the apron of the stage... with my mother behind the closed curtains feeding him his lines.
      These days, we'd probably just give him an ear bud.

  • @Operaandchant90
    @Operaandchant90 4 месяца назад +5

    The rehearsal process described here really sounds like what it is like to be in a Church/Cathedral choir. I remember one moment where we'd rehearsed a piece once before mass- and it wasn't until the actual mass that I really felt the meaning of 'we sat down and wept bitter tears' ring through the building.
    Strangely, it made it more meaningful that I never sang it again.

  • @GSBarlev
    @GSBarlev Год назад +108

    Standing in the donut hole at the Globe for _Taming of the Shrew_ (performed by an all-female cast) was the absolute highlight of my first trip to London. Having this additional context is making me appreciate it all the more in retrospect.
    Also, seeing the bits from _Star Trek VI_ and _Portal 2_ made my morning.

    • @historiansayori2089
      @historiansayori2089 8 месяцев назад +1

      That’s sounds like a good bit of dark irony to see “Taming of the Shrew” with an all-female cast of all Shakespeare’s plays

    • @GSBarlev
      @GSBarlev 8 месяцев назад

      @@historiansayori2089 It was an incredible experience. The way the actor who played Petruchio delivered the final line... completely changed the tone of the ending. I was legitimately crying.

  • @leahbiffin8432
    @leahbiffin8432 Год назад +115

    We do something vaguely like that sometimes at my live action roleplaying game. None or very little rehersal, putting on a play within the game, narrator reading parts off sheets with no prior knowledge of the story of the play. And an audience likely to engage and heckle. Lots of fun.

    • @acchaladka
      @acchaladka Год назад +18

      I have thought, as son of a professor of this kind of stuff, that fantasy role play and LARP types of things today is a bit closer to the form and style of drama of yesterday.

  • @originalkaratemastr
    @originalkaratemastr 10 месяцев назад +74

    The Popup Globe in Australia/New Zealand had a bunch of shows in a replica globe theatre. We indeed stood up the whole time, were encouraged to participate in the performance, and some of us were given cue cards to yell lines at the actors.
    It really felt like an historical production. I wish they'd survived the pandemic, they were brilliant 😊

    • @irenejennings3747
      @irenejennings3747 9 месяцев назад +2

      Wasn't the Pop Up Globe fantastic. Wish it would return to Auckland.

    • @pollyrg97
      @pollyrg97 8 месяцев назад +4

      I remember being sent to Auckland for two nights for a conference. Walking from the hotel to the conference centre I passed the Pop-up Globe. Got super excited and vowed to see whatever was playing that night. It was Othello. 10/10 highlight of that trip

  • @hailtotheengineers
    @hailtotheengineers Год назад +31

    I am an American and can confirm that there are people who walk up and down the stairs at not just baseball but most sporting events selling beer, food and souvenirs, for those who don't want to get up to go to the concession stands.

    • @Spearca
      @Spearca 4 месяца назад +1

      It turns out that the English cannot be trusted to drink in the stands at sporting events. Seriously. Even at Premier League games with beer sold on the concourse, it is not permitted to carry/consume drinks in view of the pitch.

  • @giren0079
    @giren0079 Год назад +85

    So for a college Shakespeare class we had to do a play in around two hours, since they would have to finish before it gets dark and no intermission. We had to do everything super fast.Going so quickly really changed how it felt.

  • @rowdybliss
    @rowdybliss Год назад +67

    Cue scripts-called “sides”-are still used today in modern plays and musicals. I don’t like using them because they are TERRIBLE for learning lines. If you’re on stage relying on your fellow actor for cues and they forget/paraphrase the cue, you’re more than likely screwed.

    • @TheUnmade
      @TheUnmade 11 месяцев назад +2

      Sides are also used daily in TV and film, although they’re probably different from the ones used in plays and musicals.
      Each day, crew members and cast are handed a packet of small (maybe 4” x 6”) pages, with the front being a miniature version of the day’s call sheet and the remaining pages being only the parts of the script we’re shooting that day.
      What are the play/musical sides like if, unlike TV and film, you’re performing the whole production at once?

    • @rowdybliss
      @rowdybliss 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheUnmade pretty similar to what you’re describing, actually-it’s a booklet containing only my lines for the whole show, as well as the cues from any other actors in the scenes I’m in. If I have only a small part, the sides can literally be maybe ten pages, ha! Same with the vocal parts for shows; rarely does every actor get a full copy of everything along with the piano reduction accompaniment (very annoying for singers to not see full scores!). With so much being digital these days, I see sides less and less… but 20 years ago, all the big theatre rights companies-MTI, Dramatists Play Service, etc-we’d pay for the rights and the rental of music and sides, and we had to return those sides in pristine condition or get charged for damage. Many of us old-timer actors know what those little black books looked like, and we guarded them with our lives lest they get lost or damaged… they were pricey!

    • @TheUnmade
      @TheUnmade 10 месяцев назад

      @@rowdybliss That’s fascinating that you have to pay for sides, but I suppose it makes a certain kind of sense given the medium.
      Given that rental process, is there any thought of “These sides were used by [insert famous actor here]”? I’d imagine that could be fun.
      Our sides on set are just printed the night before and get thrown out or litter our cars/bags/lives, haha! The only time I’ve had to specifically take care of sides in a specific manner is if you’re working on something like a Marvel show, where they want you to turn in your sides for destruction at the end of the day for story security.

  • @Yourmomma568
    @Yourmomma568 11 месяцев назад +7

    There was a theater company in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada, where they had a large open air theatre. The show started on the main stage, and then I heard a narrator begin telling a story from somewhere I couldn't see. I ended up staring off into the scenery of the farmland in the distance while I listened (it was a horseshoe shaped building for the seating). After 20 minutes I realized that the narrator was an actor delivering a soliloquy, and all the other people talking were actually performing just around the corner where they were just out of my normal field of view. I had been listening intently and enjoying it, but a bit confused about why it was a play if it was just a long story. Anyway, I was still enjoying it, and going from listening to watching the actors was honestly a bit jarring. I had created an image of what these people looked like, where they were, and what they were doing, and the illusion was broken once I saw them. They had song breaks and dances to break up scenes, and the show ended with a dance number. Watching this now, I realize how much they must have been influenced by the history of theater. They marketed themselves as such. It was a neat experience. Lots of mosquitoes, though.

  • @WhoddaWhaddu
    @WhoddaWhaddu Год назад +42

    Original Practice Shakespeare in Portland, Oregon, USA does this very style and has for about a decade... mostly. They perform at night in parks with artificial lights, but they get cue scripts, only rehearse battles and songs, and they do about 20 different shows a summer, only performing on weekends. If you're in the Pacific Northwest in the summer, I encourage to to check them out

  • @pipmiller8303
    @pipmiller8303 11 месяцев назад +26

    I've actually had the pleasure to act in an original practices Shakespeare play before (Pericles). We all got our scripts a week in advance with only our dialogue and the three cue lines before each of our lines along with very limited stage direction. Then we all got together the morning of the play, rehearsed it a couple of times, and then put it on. Due to the theater we were in our audience could see us just fine, but we didn't have any lights to dim. The audience still didn't talk during the play though, I guess they were all just used to not talking while people were on stage. It was, on the one hand, some of the most fun I've ever had doing a Shakespeare play. On the other hand though I think I would die if I had to memorize another play at the same time, I legitimately have no idea how people ever could have done that.

  • @pierrekimmel7364
    @pierrekimmel7364 Год назад +10

    In France, around 2005 they did a representation of "Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" by Moliere (17th century) with original pronounciation 1nd ancient instruments, trying to recreate costumes and playing/dancing style, all of that WITH CANDLELIGHT ONLY. And it is beyond brilliant

  • @oliverbrownlow5615
    @oliverbrownlow5615 Год назад +55

    When I was a very young child, I was one of the two titular stars of a play called *Astronauts Visit Mother Goose Land,* performed by my preschool. This was a big event, and my preschool teacher arranged to have us perform on the stage at a local public school, and invited all the parents. Because experience had taught her that lowering the house lights scared preschool kids, she kept the house lights on for the entire performance, with the predictable result that the parents chatted loudly throughout the entire play, and the child actors could hardly be heard at all.

    • @yellowstarproductions6743
      @yellowstarproductions6743 4 месяца назад

      That sounds like a not good experience.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 4 месяца назад +1

      @@yellowstarproductions6743 Not for me -- I was one of the stars of a cool play, and I knew all my. lines. I didn't know the audience couldn't hear me, and I wasn't fazed when I found out, because for me, the experience was more like private imaginary play with my age-mates than "being on stage." My brother, two years older than me, was in the audience, and he also enjoyed the play, being fascinated by our rocket-shaped spaceship, though it was a stationary set piece that never moved (the play opened with the astronauts already having landed). After the show, he wanted to go up on stage and see the inside of the rocket, hoping to see a control panel, but of course, it was nothing but plain cardboard with a light wooden frame, painted only on the outside. My mom was a bit irritated that she hadn't been able to hear, but my dad, observing our fascination with the rocketship set piece, soon afterward constructed a plain cardboard replica of it in our basement, and my brother and I flew everywhere in it.

  • @sarahelmore83
    @sarahelmore83 10 месяцев назад +22

    Back in June, my renaissance fair troupe (I’m in Arkansas in the US, so in the south) was invited to come be part of an open air showing of Shakespeare’s work (it was a cast of 3 and they did an abridged show in the way of a Shakespeare comedy). It was amazing- there wasn’t curtains or lights, the line between audience and the show was permeable and the interaction really changed everything about how I view Shakespeare. It was my first time getting to see the work performed how it was meant to be performed and it was brilliant.

  • @hollisoorebeek6963
    @hollisoorebeek6963 6 месяцев назад +5

    fascinating to learn that bookholders go that far back- when i was involved in plays in elementary school, we were all constantly forgetting our lines (because we were kids) and they had a lady sitting on the edge of the stage who would say something to hint at what the line was (if i'm not mistaken, i think she was also a narrator that framed the beginning and ending of the plays, so i guess that makes a bit more sense).
    good to know they didn't just do that because we were a bunch of little dumbasses

  • @stuffedninja1337
    @stuffedninja1337 10 месяцев назад +14

    I feel like the “having to keep an entire library of plays in your head” thing could potentially be mitigated the way AKB48 mitigates the issue of “we perform at our theatre literally every night” by having a rotating group (so like, group A on Monday, group B on Tuesday, etc), but I also can’t imagine there were enough people to pull that off in the late 1500’s….

  • @DaveJoria
    @DaveJoria 10 месяцев назад +5

    I didn’t do it myself, but I worked with a pro Shakespeare company in MD that had some shows that way. You’d get cast, you’d have a month to memorize your lines and cues, and you show up two days before the show. One rehearsal for entrances and exits and one dress rehearsal and you go up the next night.

  • @kevinwells9751
    @kevinwells9751 11 месяцев назад +10

    I got to see A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Globe back in the mid 2000's and it was great! We did the bottom row seats so we had a pretty decent view of the stage. Like you said modern audiences just interact with plays differently, but it was cool to see it in a more historically accurate theater

  • @Peter-oh3hc
    @Peter-oh3hc Год назад +5

    Audience - audio - listen to a play. Love this. Thank you

  • @TinkerRyphna
    @TinkerRyphna Год назад +30

    A few things I was thinking off as you went:
    - the style of rehearsal makes me think of how a “live” weekly show would run (think Saturday Night Live skits and such) where practice it super short because you’re literally putting on a new show all the time.
    - In modern time, and more cheaply, I could see that kind of play be produced “virtually”. For example there is a VR world that has started producing music shows Live (not recorded) with virtual live audience where everyone hear both the show and the audience. An alternative would be to create sort of a Live radio show because of the way the script is written you don’t even have to see the actors to know what they are doing, so long as each voice is distinct enough for you to know who’s talking. Kind of like Old Time Radio shows where they did the show live in front of audiences.
    It was super interesting to learn all the differences between the modern theater and the theater of old. It sound like theater used to be a hoot!
    Edit: I could see a Twitch or RUclips Live channel where actors give a live performance. It be really cool to watch.

    • @acchaladka
      @acchaladka Год назад +5

      Great comment, I think the comparison to improv TV is accurate. Makes me wonder why theaters didn't try this kind of thing during the pandemic - have Stratford Ontario call up a few old famous Shakespeare vets and ask everyone to horse around with a table reading they like, in a virtual space, subtitles available, while chatting and charging tens of thousands of viewers globally a penny or two for an hour. An hour of Dames Dench, Mirren, or Sir Patrick and Ian around a virtual table with a great director and lesser-knowns - let's do that a few times a month and make it free for non-G7 countries. Charge three pennies to sit in on the post-show discussion. Etc.

    • @TinkerRyphna
      @TinkerRyphna Год назад +1

      @@acchaladka I'd love to sit on such a show! Sound awesome!

    • @virgilxavier1
      @virgilxavier1 Год назад +1

      Interesting if play with done in VR the actress would have the option of Reading lines off the screen

    • @user-kg4fc5vz5p
      @user-kg4fc5vz5p Год назад +1

      There was. Well, not a theatre as such. They're called The Show must go Online and they did all the Shakespeare plays plus a few others during lockdown via zoom conference. They're probably still on here somewhere.

    • @anotherterribleday
      @anotherterribleday Год назад

      Have you heard the term Zoomcast? It was a thing that got popular during the pandemic, shows put on over Zoom or similar. Starkid's Nightmare Time series is an example - originally livestreamed, later uploaded to RUclips. I think the only segments not done live were the songs because they did a lot of editing with those. Nick Lang was the narrator, obviously a little different from Shakespeare's actors setting the scene in-character, but still.

  • @sovupo
    @sovupo 9 месяцев назад +5

    The Ben Crystal versions of Shakespeare's plays in the Original Pronunciation are absolutely incredible! The rhymes make so much sense and the flow is amazing. Would recommend to people if they can find a performance ❤

  • @thomaswilkinson3241
    @thomaswilkinson3241 Год назад +3

    I am amazed, admittedly I had an inkling but no complete knowledge of the inner workings of a performance of that kind. I mean, "Shakespeare in Love" might be a nice approach to enlighten us on some parts of it, but it is Hollywood or what we might call it, so not every historical aspect will be in the spotlight and accuracy by historical sciences standards is not to be expected.
    By the way and just as a sidenote, beautiful new haircut.
    Keep up the magnificent work. I will be coming back for more.

  • @shoveldoggermafia
    @shoveldoggermafia Год назад +35

    I adore your passion and enthusiasm. It is so infectious . I am drawn to people so obviously shining their star. Thank you for that really wonderfully creative contribution to waking up. :)

    • @sergiodbd
      @sergiodbd 11 месяцев назад

      The algorithm smiled on me today. And I’m already hooked too 😅

  • @Chibi-kittenplays
    @Chibi-kittenplays Год назад +34

    No matter the topic, you present it SO amazingly. I never cared about Shakespear before!

  • @BearFierce
    @BearFierce Год назад +2

    Love these longer videos. When my partner and I visit London again, we will have to book one of your tours. Also love the Monster Energy Drink cameo. Queer Solidarity

  • @LondonCadance
    @LondonCadance 11 месяцев назад +3

    The grassroots Shakespeare company in Provo Utah does the original rehearsal style. When I had the chance to go they also encouraged audience participation. It was a lot of fun.

  • @MeFreeBee
    @MeFreeBee Год назад +6

    On a tour of the Sadler's Wells, before it was rebuilt, I learned that in the inter-war years the price of the cheapest seats was pegged at 3 times the cost of a packet of cigarettes to ensure the theatre was accessible to all. This rule was still in place at the time of the tour (late 80s or very early 90s). I don't know if this still stands, but I imagine tobacco tax rises will have blunted its effect.

  • @lizhumble9953
    @lizhumble9953 Год назад +3

    They do sell drinks, peanuts, popcorn, cotton candy, hot dogs, and sometimes beer (sometimes you have to go get it depending on state alcohol laws) by vendors or hawkers in the stands at the baseball games.

  • @YTKR5
    @YTKR5 11 месяцев назад +1

    The audience / audio has blown my mind like a great twist

  • @Pablo668
    @Pablo668 Год назад +4

    Wow, Iknew precisely none of that. I was once told by an English Lit teacher that with Shalespeare, most of the props were in the words.

  • @hannahbrown2728
    @hannahbrown2728 Год назад +4

    Mild tangent but when I went to a concert it was in a baseball stadium, and there were plenty of concessions. Alcohol wasnt carted around you had to go to a stall but you didnt have to drink it somewhere specific.
    But there was this delightfully cherry man who very much made me want to buy a lemonade. He was walking up and down the stairs of the bleachers during some of the opening sets before Incubus headlined proper screaming "LEMONADE, LEMONADE! JUST LIKE GRANDMA MADE!" I have to this day never heard a more compelling pitch. Shame I was broke at the time.
    9:10 Oh neat thats Arthur Darvill!

  • @rosemarygilman8718
    @rosemarygilman8718 9 месяцев назад +4

    I am so impressed by your ability to talk about history in such an entertaining, engageging, clever, and exciting way! I love it! And I'm learning so much! You are amazing!

  • @jayleejames864
    @jayleejames864 3 месяца назад +1

    In our high school, the English classes put on a different Shakespeare play every year. The original rehearsal schedule was definitely out... but we did the dances for scene changes, and we would preform for the elementary school, who sat on the floor in the "cheap seats" and they certainly booed the villains and cheered the good guys rather loudly LOL

  • @OliverCovfefe
    @OliverCovfefe Год назад +14

    I really love your longform videos, please make as many as you can and want to as often as possible

  • @eowalton
    @eowalton 10 месяцев назад +6

    The intermission thing could be easily gotten around. I saw a 3-4 hour comedic Cantonese opera in Kowloon. It had like 20 acts but only a minute intermission between each act. Way too brief for the mostly elderly Chinese audience's (and mine) bladders to handle. But each of us would just shuffle out during the intermission, take a bathroom break, snack, or dinner near-by, and then return during one of the following intermissions. I missed a scene or two but big whoop. I got back by the finale.

  • @MatthewPhillips-lb6xu
    @MatthewPhillips-lb6xu Месяц назад

    I adore J. Draper. Wonderful history lessons.

  • @davidponseigo8811
    @davidponseigo8811 Год назад +18

    I'm American but I have adored Shakespeare since I was a child. I read everything he wrote by the time I was 12 , I didn't understand it all but I kept reading it until I did. I was a teenager during the 1980's so being a fan of Shakespeare was a bit odd to other people but I was a football player and a pretty big guy so people just thought I was quirky and left me to my reading.

  • @112steinway
    @112steinway Год назад +3

    I don't know if they're still doing it, but there is/was a theater company in Portland Oregon that did actually do Shakespeare plays in the original style. It was outside, in a park, very informal, and they didn't make any money outside of concessions. Also, the problems brought up in this video were on full display here, especially the audience being too polite (I went to go see McBeth, and they did start yelling at the end).
    I really enjoyed it and would go again. Also, someone flew a drone over the performance and the book reader had a fun time playing around with it.

  • @jacobkrausch
    @jacobkrausch Год назад +15

    I love these longer form videos, always a nice treat when you put them out. always at the right time. When my check comes in, I'll be tipping you!

  • @sfbuck415
    @sfbuck415 5 месяцев назад

    'Nacreous' is my new word. I love it. I'm going to work it into every conversation now.

  • @sarai846
    @sarai846 Год назад +1

    When I visited London in June 2016 I went on a guided tour of Shakespeare's Globe (I heard about the place in Doctor Who) and after a few days I went to the play A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Globe, I was excited to watch a Shakespeare play at Shakespeare's Globe. I bought a standing ticket for £5 and it was great (apart from the drizzle, it was raining all day). It turned out that the actors entered from the entrance next to me, waited next to me until it was their turn to go on stage and some of the characters also played among the audience. It was a wonderful evening.

  • @BethDiane
    @BethDiane Год назад +3

    I once went to a performance by P. D. Q. Bach. These were a sort of burlesque on standard classical music concerts. In this case, the show started with a "stage manager" in a plaid jacket (à la Spike Jones) coming out to announce that the musicians are late and that we, the audience, would have to just sit there and wait (in contrast to the more usual obsequious apologies I would expect). This one was at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, which also has box seats that command a better view of the audience than of the stage. So the "stage manager" called up to the people in the box closest to the stage, "Can you see all right up there?" Evidently, someone answered "no," because the stage manager replied to that, "Tough shit, you should have gotten better seats!"

  • @paulroberts3639
    @paulroberts3639 Год назад +5

    Knickers weren’t invented yet. So what did ladies throw at the heartthrob on stage? Coins? Rocks? The Tudor equivalent of Monster drinks?

    • @ninab.4540
      @ninab.4540 Год назад

      Dead cats, very in vouge

  • @DaraEhteshamzadeh
    @DaraEhteshamzadeh 3 месяца назад +1

    Some baseball games do in fact sell beer and food in the stands. Most have concession stands behind the bleachers.

  • @abefroman53
    @abefroman53 8 месяцев назад

    This is my new favorite channel, I will watch all the videos and no one can stop me!

  • @Srikstar
    @Srikstar Год назад +12

    Just one word. Fabulous ❤. Both the concept of the Theatre of those times and the way Jo made it come alive in this video. She really is the most underrated RUclips personality ever. Wish there could be at least a million more subscribers to this channel🙏❤️😊

  • @NoFishCanSwim
    @NoFishCanSwim Год назад +5

    Absolutely brilliant content. So much I didn’t know. Thank you for a million miles.

  • @Napukin
    @Napukin Год назад +1

    Good to see ya for longer than ten seconds at a time.

  • @neddles33
    @neddles33 Год назад +2

    Thank you for reminding me I need to rewatch that all male Twelfth Night.
    Every time I'm in London I try and get into a Globe performance (not many so far). The atmosphere in there is always so joyful and excited

  • @RadishTheFool
    @RadishTheFool Год назад +4

    This is truly truly top quality. I can't even imagine how much time and thought must have gone into producing just this video, let alone the years and years of working and learning that you had to put into even getting to that point. Thank you so much for sharing all of that with us; it's so immensely interesting.

  • @SweetButDeadly101
    @SweetButDeadly101 Год назад +7

    Thank you for this incredibly informative piece. I'm intending to travel to London next year, and watching your channel has been SO informative. Also... you had me at Lewis Hamilton flavoured Monster!!

  • @lillustpotion
    @lillustpotion 11 месяцев назад +1

    My friend and I turned up (violently hungover) and those 3 hours standing were BRUTAL but worth every second.

  • @leannasmithberger9130
    @leannasmithberger9130 10 месяцев назад +1

    In Staunton (pronounced Stan-tin) Virginia, USA performs in a recreation of the Blackfriars, and every year they do a multi-week festival where they rehearse the way they were done originally, and have the line person off to the side. It was always one of my favorite times to go. I also often bought cheap student rush tickets and would get to sit on stage or in the balcony.

  • @Acnoth
    @Acnoth Год назад +3

    I absolutely adore you and your videos! I have learned so much.

  • @johnhaller5851
    @johnhaller5851 Год назад +3

    I was very disappointed there was no jig to go with the music as the patron list streamed 😂
    Very informative as always

    • @JDraper
      @JDraper  Год назад +4

      You're so right, I should have absolutely done a jig! Kicking myself now

  • @charlesedwardlincolniii1722
    @charlesedwardlincolniii1722 5 месяцев назад

    J. Draper---I love you! You're one of the best shows on-line. I want to meet you next time I'm in London.

  • @icarusbinns3156
    @icarusbinns3156 Год назад +1

    One trick I saw in my hometown for getting ‘the dead’ off stage was for one of the ‘scene change’ girls to come over with a broom, and nudge the ‘corpses’, prompting them to roll away. This was performed in the afternoon. There was no proper stage. It was outside… in was in the most open stretch in the Historical Village Park. The actors basically had to yell over the sound of the creek in full flood behind them! It was ridiculous, and I wish we could do it again!
    And yeah… basically no one knew their lines. The scene change girl was essentially the bookholder.
    No dance at the end, just a line, bows, and saying thank you to everyone who’d shown up

  • @richardanderson2742
    @richardanderson2742 Год назад +4

    As is often said, context is everything. You have done an outstanding job of giving the plays the setting of their era....and frankly conveyed more information than my English professor managed in a semester. Indeed, I believe this to be one of your best videos yet.

  • @rhysalexander182
    @rhysalexander182 Год назад +4

    Jenny, this was a fantastic video. I somewhat specialise in Shakespeare’s London tours, so I regularly talk about all this stuff, but you articulated it all so well! So much nuanced detail! Well done!

  • @skelo9033
    @skelo9033 9 месяцев назад

    Holy shit a decent mic makes all the difference, I’d been watching your shorts for a while and my god the mic quality is so much better here

  • @LilyBoHatch
    @LilyBoHatch Год назад +4

    I'm a huge Shakespeare nerd and I had a lot of fun listening you describe this! I forget how much of this is not common knowledge. My friend was listening over my shoulder and I had to pause several times to explain my own experiences and add onto your history lesson. She was in awe. You did such a great job of explaining this history and we can see how passionate you are as you talk about it.

  • @peterjohncooper
    @peterjohncooper Год назад +3

    A beautiful summing up of the whole thing. Well presented. There have been quite a few efforts to try and reform a more organic style of theatre with varying results. When I started there were still companies doing weekly rep - a season of plays that rehearsed tuesday to Saturday during the day and dress rehearsed Mondays to open that evening. Quite exciting.

  • @EmilyExplosion27
    @EmilyExplosion27 10 месяцев назад +1

    Over here in Oregon we have Original Practice Shakespeare. It's not quite as intense (1-2 different plays a week), and it tends to start getting dark towards the end of the play. But they have the little scrolls, they don't rehearse together, and there is a keeper of the book.

  • @artemis5210
    @artemis5210 8 месяцев назад +1

    I LOVED THIS! I was surprised to discover brand new information!!! And I took about 3 or 4 Shakespeare classes in university. BRAVO!

  • @lsedge7280
    @lsedge7280 Год назад +4

    I feel like if you wanted to do it today, it might end up working more economically viable to have normal shows most of the week, but there's a day of the week when you get the ̶So̶u̶p̶ 'Play of the Day'.

  • @johndthackray
    @johndthackray Год назад +6

    There is the improvised shakespeare company. Which while far from faithful - being entirely improv. I think captures some of the same energy, as the performers literally don't know where the script is going until they do the performance.

  • @design8ed_nee-san977
    @design8ed_nee-san977 9 месяцев назад

    7:26 Yes, this is true. Vendors selling concessions amid the stands is practically a staple of baseball. Stadiums vary on what is sold in the crowd and at designated concession stands. It’s primarily cotton candy, hot dogs, popcorn, Cracker Jacks, peanuts (they might be boiled if you’re in the South East United States), and, as you mentioned, beer, being sold within the bleachers. Sometimes there are designated wait staff who work the VIP section. They go to and from the primary concession counters with the VIP orders, which is pretty wild considering that there are typically people bustling around all through the match.

  • @medusalithpax3572
    @medusalithpax3572 3 месяца назад +1

    If youre ever in New Mexico, USA and you visit Albuquerque during baseball season, you can go to an Isotopes game! Our minor league baseball team was named after the Springfield Isotopes on the Simpsons ❤❤❤

  • @Skag_Sisyphus
    @Skag_Sisyphus Год назад +7

    If plays were only $5, I'd see way more plays
    Edit: yes, at baseball games, beer is sold at a stand and snacks are or at least were sold like in cartoons. Idk how much it's changed since 2005 but i can't imagine that much. The only difference is that they don't announce what they're selling. That's an old timey thing, i think.

  • @NikkiDoesStufff
    @NikkiDoesStufff Год назад +3

    Lmao when you said “like a baseball game” I was so confused and impressed that you were using that as a reference point cause I didn’t think baseball was popular in the UK and then you said you based it on the Simpsons 🤣🤣

  • @jeffreyplum5259
    @jeffreyplum5259 9 месяцев назад

    Miss You already act amazingly. You play many roles already, each done superbly, long form shorts, milady does it alll. God bless you

  • @scientious
    @scientious 7 месяцев назад +1

    Soap operas in the US were done the same way. There would be a new script every weekday and they were shown in the afternoon. So, the actors only had time for one morning rehearsal.

  • @rimothytimothy1398
    @rimothytimothy1398 Год назад +18

    How do you know someone is a total theatre-nerd? Just listen to them discuss theatre and you can hear it in their voice.

  • @justforplaylists
    @justforplaylists Год назад +6

    If they're performing daily, and each play is only performed 12 times, and Shakespeare wrote less than 40 plays over more than 20 years... They must have been performing plays by a bunch of other people as well, right?

    • @NJMerlin
      @NJMerlin Год назад +5

      Yes, there were many, many plays, many of which we don’t have. (And many of which were rubbish.)

  • @mariannetfinches
    @mariannetfinches 7 месяцев назад

    I should have counted how many times during this video I audibly gasped as I learned something new! Audiences! Drag queens! Light bulbs! Man I love facts. Thanks!

  • @kennethbain4290
    @kennethbain4290 10 месяцев назад

    Wow, mind duly blown.🤯 I never realised I could be so interested in the history of stage productions. Ironically enough, very illuminating - I will never look at Shakespeare (or theatre) with the same eyes again ! 🤔

  • @Mathemagical55
    @Mathemagical55 Год назад +4

    Please increase the volume next time.

  • @whmurraysidney
    @whmurraysidney 9 месяцев назад

    This presentation was stunning. Kudos and bravo, I am standing an clapping in my kitchen!

  • @brettmcmahon7263
    @brettmcmahon7263 9 месяцев назад

    Bravo Ms Draper, you've done it again..

  • @educativecapstone
    @educativecapstone 10 месяцев назад

    The "audience" comment gave me food for thought, as well as the "chatting" context.

  • @kerilithia
    @kerilithia 10 месяцев назад +1

    I live in western australia and about ten years ago someone set up a temporary Shakespearian style theatre made out of scaffolding which looked almost exactly the same with cheep standing tickets in the open air and more expensive siting ones under the roofs. Most of the attendees left when it started raining so I am very glad I paid the extra for the seated ones so my sister and I got to watch Measure for Measure all the way through.

  • @Secret_Troilus
    @Secret_Troilus Год назад +1

    I actually just graduated with my MFA in Shakespeare & Performance from Mary Baldwin University. The program has a partnership with the American Shakespeare Center which houses the only recreation of the Blackfriars Playhouse. The ASC actually has entire seasons they call their REN seasons where everything is done the way it would’ve been done in Shakespeare’s day: no director, cue scripts, one prompter, and one week to put on the show. One of the show cycles my program has us do is the REN show, and my cohort put on a REN style production of The Birth of Merlin in a single week. It was absolutely wild but so much fun!! ❤

    • @abydosianchulac2
      @abydosianchulac2 11 месяцев назад +1

      Hahaha, I knew I was going to find MBU grads in the comments!

    • @Secret_Troilus
      @Secret_Troilus 11 месяцев назад

      @@abydosianchulac2 haha yep we’re everywhere 🤷🏻‍♂️